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This Hemisphere of Hell: The First Battalion, 24th Marines in World War II [Kõva köide]

  • Formaat: Hardback, 640 pages, kõrgus x laius: 229x152 mm, 80 photographs and maps
  • Ilmumisaeg: 01-Jun-2026
  • Kirjastus: Casemate Publishers
  • ISBN-10: 163624663X
  • ISBN-13: 9781636246635
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  • Formaat: Hardback, 640 pages, kõrgus x laius: 229x152 mm, 80 photographs and maps
  • Ilmumisaeg: 01-Jun-2026
  • Kirjastus: Casemate Publishers
  • ISBN-10: 163624663X
  • ISBN-13: 9781636246635
Teised raamatud teemal:
From the land that God forgot to Hell with the fire out, the men of First Battalion, 24th Marines saw the worst of the Pacific war. They endured four major Pacific campaigns in thirteen monthsfrom their baptism of fire at Namur, through the bloody hills of Saipan and the burning cane fields of Tinian, to the hell of Iwo Jima where more than half their number became casualties. If not for the atomic bomb, they would have been fated to lead the assault to recapture Wake Island.

Their history is more than deployment dates and casualty figures: it is the experiences of individual Marines, both before and after the war, that bring the battalion to life. College students and high school dropouts, lawyers and CCC workers, football stars and teenage runaways served side by side: some developed into Marine Corps legends, some betrayed their comrades, and some died before having a chance to truly live. They were photographed by W. Eugene Smith for LIFE Magazine, filmed by Hollywood for Guadalcanal Diary, and profiled in newspapers. After the war they became career Marines, doctors, professors, politicians, family men, alcoholics, recluses, and criminals; their legacies encompass heroism, perseverance, loss, anger, and acceptancethe full spectrum of human experience.

This immersive account of their experiences pairs previously unpublished personal accounts with meticulous research in an intensely detailed, foxhole-eye view of the Pacific War from a new perspective.
Prologue: He Was A Marine
The End Of The World That We Knew: From Civilians to Volunteers
The Land That God Forgot: Parris Island
Difficult As The Devil: Officer Training, 19411942
Spanish Moss and Black Water: New River, North Carolina
This Really Is A Rugged Life: Camp Pendleton, California
Not Afraid Of Pain Or Death: Operation FLINTLOCKRoi-Namur
The Wrong Ballgame: Namur, February 12, 1944
Touched By War: Occupation Duty, February 311, 1944
Prizefighter's Training Camp: Camp Maui, FebruaryMay 1944
No One Thought Of Failure: Operation FORAGERSaipan
War At Its Grimmest: Saipan, June 16July 1, 1944
The Marpi Point Marathon: Saipan, July 213, 1944
Here We Go Again: Operation FORAGERTinian
A Very Simple Formula: Preparing for 1945
Another Rock To Be Taken: Operation DETACHMENTIwo Jima
Hell With The Fire Out: Iwo JimaFebruary 2028
Meat Grinder: Iwo JimaMarch 18
The End Of The Rope: Iwo JimaMarch 918
The Last Summer AprilOctober 1945
The Grand Stream of History: Life After War
Epilogue: MuMu

Appendix A: Narrators
Appendix B: Gyrene Speak
Appendix C: Decorations
Appendix D: Taps
Geoffrey W. Roecker is the author of the critically acclaimed book Leaving Mac Behind: The Lost Marines of Guadalcanal. He began writing about the First Battalion, 24th Marines in 2011, creating Missing Marines, a project inspired by the fates of three men from 1/24th Marines. A vocal advocate for the return of unidentified World War II service members, Roecker has contributed to several successful USMC repatriations. His work has appeared in Leatherneck Magazine, Marine Corps History, and online at www.1-24thMarines.com and www.missingmarines.com.